Black Women Entrepreneurs Progressing

It is time for business analysts and researchers to give more attention to the entrepreneurial dynamics of minority women – rather than continuing to lump them into the category of all minorities. According to a new survey by the Census Bureau, women make up 20.5% of the nation’s 5.2 million persons who own firms that have one or more employees, as of 2014. Interestingly, minority women in general and Black women, in particular, are more likely to own a more significant percentage of businesses in their respective groups- when compared to white women.

On September 1, 2016, the Census Bureau released a new survey entitled, Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs (ASE). It uses data collected from a sample of approximately 290,000 employer-based firms that operated during 2014. An employer-firm is as an enterprise with one or more full-time workers.

There are some unique dynamics regarding gender ownership characteristics by race and ethnicity. Women owned 20.5% of all such firms. However, white women held 19.6% of all white-owned employer businesses, but minority women held 26.8% of all employer-based firms owned by minorities.

More notable, Black women had the highest percentage ownership rate of all gender groups. They held 35.1% of all Black-owned employer firms; followed by Native American women, 29.2%; Asian women, 27.1%, and Hispanic/Latino women, 24.3%. In comparison, white women had the lowest within group percentage ownership,19.6%.

The table below illustrates the findings. The results suggest that policymakers and business analysts should start giving more attention to patterns of women business ownership and stop merely combining them into the category of all minorities.